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Residential Cooling Loads - Plug load

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gooutandgetem

Mechanical
Mar 6, 2012
9
I dont work with residental HVAC designs much.

I have a 800 SF unit with 3 exposed walls (r-6 wall, r19 attic insul). I can up with 1.3 tons (about600 sf/ton).

I used .7 watts per SF lighting and .5 watts per SF plug load. Are these reasonable values for a residental unit?

Is the overall tonnage seen resonable? (I would use a 1.5 ton unit).
 
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I think that's a bit of an overkill, but it depends on what your customer likes and tolerates. My previous home, at 2200 sf, used a 3-ton, while most of the other A/C wanted to install a 4-ton. The 3-ton probably ran longer and a bit harder, but seemed to do the job reasonably well. The rule of thumb seems to vary from about 500sf/ton to 700sf/ton. Hypothetically, you could get by with a 1-ton system.

TTFN
faq731-376
7ofakss
 
check ASHRAE tabls for values, 1 ton I think is enough.
in residential lighting is not ON all the time like commercial, especially in day time.
 
Newer technology using digital scroll compressors in the condensing unit can help if your a/c is slightly oversized.
 
Great point, this project in in GA, so units that short cycle to maintain temp and don't reduce humidity (latent laod) is a concern.
 
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